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Citation: Veldman, J. (2016). Corporation: Reification of the corporate form. In: R. Mir, H. Willmott & M. Greenwood (Eds.), The Routledge Companion to Philosophy in Organization Studies. (pp. 333-342). London, UK: Routledge. ISBN 9781134466085
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HUMANISTIC MANAGEMENT NETWORK
RESEARCH PAPER NO. 06/16
Corporation: Reification of the Corporate Form
Jeroen Veldman
08/22/2015
The Modern Corporation Project
www.themoderncorporation.com
Working Paper:
Corporation: Reification of the corporate form
Chapter published in Greenwood, M., Mir, R., Willmott, H. (Eds.), Routledge
Companion to Philosophy in Organization Studies. Routledge, New York.
Working Paper Series
The Modern Corporation Project
Jeroen Veldman, Cass Business School, City University
Hugh Willmott, Cass Business School, City University
Working Paper Version ‘Corporation: Reification of the corporate form’ 22-8-2015
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Corporation: Reification of the corporate form This working paper version: August 22, 2015
Published as
Veldman, J., 2016. Corporation: Reification of
the corporate form, in Greenwood, M., Mir,
R., Willmott, H. (Eds.), Routledge Companion
to Philosophy in Organization Studies.
Routledge, New York.
The Modern Corporation Project
www.themoderncorporation.com
Cass Business School City University, London, UK
Working Paper Version ‘Corporation: Reification of the corporate form’ 22-8-2015
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www.themoderncorporation.com
Corporation Reification of the corporate form
Jeroen Veldman Introduction The corporation is commonly perceived as a self-evident way of understanding what a business
is and how it operates. And yet, almost all of the specific properties that make up the modern
corporation would have been unthinkable less than two centuries ago. Until the start of the
nineteenth century, the partnership form remained dominant for private ventures and the law
of partnerships ruled the ventures that did receive a corporate charter (Ireland, 2010; Mclean,
2004). Most of the ideas that define the modern corporation, including incorporation and
perpetuity for private ventures; limited liability; the separate legal entity; attributions of
ownership; attributions of (citizenship) rights and (contractual) agency to a separate legal
‘entity’; the capacity for a corporate entity to ‘own’ another corporate entity; and the capacity
for groups of such entities to operate over jurisdictional borders are concepts that have been
developed mostly during the nineteenth century.
Arguably, the development and application of these ideas has turned the corporate form into a
very successful and highly dominant type of business representation, which during the
twentieth century replaced the partnership form as the most prevalent legal form for private
ventures in the US (Guinnane et al., 2007). However, the fact that the overall success of the
corporation may well rely on a set of very specific concepts is often forgotten. In a remarkable
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article Berger and Pullberg argued that reification can make us take a social construct for granted (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 206). The problem with reification, they argued, is that we bestow an
‘ontological status on social roles and institutions’ (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 206), but that we
then perceive of such a social role or institution unconnected from ‘the human activity by which it
has been produced’(Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 199). If this happens, we end up with institutions
that ‘are reified by mystifying their true character as human objectivations and by defining them,
again, as supra-human facticities analogous to the facticities of nature’ (Berger and Pullberg,
1965: 207). Such reification, they argue, leads to ‘a narrow empiricism oblivious
of its own theoretical foundations or to build highly abstract theoretical systems emptied of
empirical content’ (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 211) and ‘minimizes the range of reflection
and choice, automatizes conduct in the socially prescribed channels and fixates the taken-
for-granted perception of the world’ (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 208).
Following Berger and Pullberg, I will problematize the corporate form as a reified social
construct. To do this, I will ask two types of questions with regard to the corporate form. The
first is a question about its ontological status (see also Al-Amoudi and O’Mahoney, Chapter 1,
this volume): what is the corporation? The second is a question about its epistemological status
(see also Duberley and Johnson, Chapter 4 this volume; Scherer et al., Chapter 2 this volume):
how can we establish criteria ‘by which we can know what does and does not constitute
warranted, or scientific, knowledge’ (Duberley and Johnson, Chapter 4 this volume) in relation to
the corporate form? To answer these questions I will first show that currently dominant accounts
of the corporation and of corporate governance (the theory of how corporation should be
governed) assumes that corporations share the same ontological status as all other types of
organizations, i.e. that all organizations essentially exist as aggregations of individuals. I will then
show how the corporate form provides a construct that in theory and in practice operates on
very different ontological assumptions. Finally, this will lead me to a critical analysis of the reified
nature of the corporate form and to a number of suggestions about how we can start to demystify
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this social construct.
The corporate form as an aggregation of individuals
In the 2011 presidential campaign, Mitt Romney responded to a heckler by making a strong
statement: ‘Corporations are people, my friend!’1
(www.nytimes.com/2011/08/12/us/politics/
12romney.html?_r=1&). Equating a corporation to a (legal) person connects to the history of the
corporate form, in which the corporation was increasingly projected as a personified social
construct (see next section). Such personified approaches to the status of the corporation have
been countered in legal and economic scholarship by those who argue that in essence, the
corporation is no more than a collection of individuals. Lord Hoffman argued in the Meridian
case that there is no such thing as a company ‘of which one can meaningfully say that it can
or cannot do something. There is in fact no such thing as a company as such’ (Meridian Global
Funds Management Asia Ltd v. Securities Commission [1995] 2 AC 500 at 507). From this
perspective, it can be said that ‘Corporations, whatever they are, are not individuals and do not
act as unitary individuals’ (Wells, 2005: 147) and we can arrive at the conclusion that ‘despite its
long history of entity, a corporation is at bottom but an association of individuals united for a
common purpose and permitted by law to use a common name’ (Berle, 1954: 352). Such
approaches that focus on the individuals that constitute the corporation to understand its
ontological status as a social and legal construct fit well with wider pragmatic, political
(Bowman, 1996) and epistemological (Elster, 2007) arguments that would urge us to ‘bracket’
any imputation of agency, ownership, and rights to social constructs, whether organizations,
corporations, or states.
From the 1950s onwards the Chicago schools of law and economics turned this view into a strong ontological argument. Rather than ‘bracketing’ the ontological status of the corporate
form for the sake of convenience, they reduced the status of the corporation to an aggregation
of individuals: ‘It finds the firm’s separate characteristics to be insignificant and attaches
determinant significance to the relationship’s aggregate parts’ (Bratton, 1989: 423). As a result,
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www.themoderncorporation.com it could be argued that ‘Individuals are ontologically prior to corporations, which, as fictions, have significance only because of the freely contracted arrangements of their human constituents’
(Scruton and Finnis, 1989: 254). With such strong ontological assumptions in place all types of
social constructs – whether corporations, organizations, or states, were in essence merely
aggregations of ‘individuals’ (Jensen and Meckling, 1976: 310–11), while the ontological status of
the corporation as a specific kind of social or legal representation was reduced to that of a mere
‘legal fiction’ (Friedman, 1970). Any imputation of consciousness (Lederman in Fisse and
Braithwaite, 1993: 488), intent (Cressey in Fisse and Braithwaite, 1993: 490; Jensen and
Meckling, 1976: 310–11), agency (Fisse and Braithwaite, 1993: 475), responsibility (Friedman,
1970: 1), or liability to a social construct such as the corporation was, therefore, squarely redirected
toward the individuals making up that social construct. Since the 1970s, the ontological and
epistemological assumptions of this seductively simple theory have become dominant in
company law, economics, and in corporate governance and have had a strong
influence on court decisions and regulatory changes (Becker, 1974; Bratton, 1989;
Daily et al., 2003; Foucault, 2008[1979]; Ghoshal, 2005: 81; Perrow, 1986: 15).
Singular and multiple The ontological approach developed in the Chicago School of law and economics seemed to
connect well to a methodological approach based on methodological individualism (Hodgson,
2007; Schrader 1993: 159). However, the reduction all organizational forms to an aggregation of
individuals went well beyond the ‘bracketing’ of the corporate form as a social construct. In
practice, this approach denied the conceptual possibility for an ontological status for the
corporate form as a construct in the legal, economic, and political imaginaries (Veldman and
Willmott, 2013). The denial of the possibility for an explanation of this separate status is
problematic when we take a closer look at the historical development of this construct.
Until the end of the eighteenth century, corporations, even when used for private purposes,
were conceptualized in a way similar to other business ventures: corporate charters were
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2010; Perrow, 2002). In this setting, the legal representation produced by incorporation did
not convey a strong conception of an ‘entity’, separate from the aggregation of individuals.
Without a strong ontological status for the corporate form in the legal imaginary, attributions of
agency, ownership or rights, and, by extension, attributions of responsibility and liability, were
mostly attributed directly to the individuals within the corporation (see Post, 1934). This
perception started to shift during the nineteenth century when the pooling of capital
by increasing numbers of shareholders created a growing separation between shareholders and
‘the company’ (Veldman and Willmott, 2013). To accommodate the increasing distance of
shareholder from ownership functions, shareholders were separated from the assets, operations,
and risks of the corporation by shifting these onto the separate legal entity. This conceptual
shift allowed for the protection of the rights of minority shareholders; the general grant of
limited liability; and the development of liquid shareholding and thus the trading of shares in a
share market. However, this move also meant that the separate legal entity increasingly came
to represent ‘the corporation’ as a conceptual construct that could be attributed with ownership
over the assets and liabilities of the corporation in the legal and economic domain. The
exact status of this ‘entity’ was never really settled in legal scholarship (Avi-Yonah and
Sivan, 2007; Dewey, 1926; Hallis, 1978; Harris, 2006).
By the end of the nineteenth century, Freund related to the idea of a ‘corporate personality’
as a convenient shortcut – ‘in most cases in which we speak of an act or an attribute as corporate, it
is not corporate in the psychologically collective sense, but merely representative, and
imputed to the corporation for reasons of policy and convenience’ (Freund, 1897: 39). Others
however, argued that the separate legal entity creates ‘a body, which by no fiction of law, but by
the very nature of things, differs from the individuals of whom it is constituted’ (Dicey, 1894–95 in
Maitland, 2003: 63). Fully separate from the aggregation of individuals, this ‘body’ could be
inserted into the slot of the legal ‘subject’: ‘As legal subjects they are distinct and in
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www.themoderncorporation.com kind different from the visible aggregate of their individual members. These individuals do not constitute the substance of that entity to which the law ascribes personality when it
recognizes a corporation aggregate as a legal subject’ (Hallis, 1978: xliii).
The status of the corporate form as a legal construct thus slipped to that of singularized ‘entity’,
existing as a separate ‘body’, apart from the aggregation of individuals. Inserted as a construct into
the slot of the legal ‘subject’, it could then be understood as a ‘body corporate’, ‘legal person’, ‘legal
personality’ or ‘legal subject’ (Freund, 1897; Horwitz, 1985; Nace, 2003). Subsequently, the use of
all kinds of anthropomorphic imagery (Nace, 2003) resulted in a rapid increase in the attribution of
agency, ownership, and rights (Bowman, 1996; Harris, 2006; Ireland, 1999; McLean, 2004) to this
construct that was increasingly depicted as singular legal ‘subject’ in and by itself. By the end of the
nineteenth century, this process had progressed to the extent that the corporate form allowed for
one ‘entity’ holding ownership over another ‘entity’, which enabled the holding company and
operations across jurisdictional borders (Veldman, 2013). As a result of such singularization and
objectification, it became possible to imagine that the corporate form would also be attributable
with contracting agency, and would contract as a ‘legal subject’, not just outside the
corporation or on behalf of the corporation, but also with the individuals inside the corporation
(Maitland, 2003).
To shift the corporate form as a legal construct from the status of a technical and passive
construct that would ‘hold’ ownership in lieu of the shareholders, to a legal construct that could be
attributed with agency, ownership and rights as an ‘entity’ that would exist in the form of
a singular ‘legal subject’ apart from the aggregation of individuals, legal scholars had to introduce
multiple inconsistent assumptions about the status of the corporate form. To justify the wide variety
of attributions made to this construct, both in its perceived capacity as an ‘entity’ and
in its perceived capacity as an aggregation of individuals, multiple assumptions about the
ontological status of this construct had to be kept in play at the same time (Veldman, 2010).
By the 1920s, it was generally accepted in US and British legal scholarship that in order to
maintain all properties and functions attributed to the corporate form, it was necessary to
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understand the corporate form as both an aggregate construct (an ‘aggregation of individuals’, a
‘nexus of contracts’) and as a singular construct (an ‘entity’, ‘subject’, ‘person’, or ‘agent’) (Dewey,
1926; Harris, 2006). This inherent multiplicity of ontological assumptions and referents would
have wide consequences.
Corporations and organizations Generally speaking, we can argue that the corporate form rests on multiple, mutually exclusive,
philosophical conceptions in the domains of law and economics and that, for this reason, it
functions as a social construct with an extremely weak theoretical foundation (Berle and Means,
2007[1932]; Freund, 1897; Gamble et al., 2000; Ireland, 2003; Laufer, 2006; Wells, 2005). Some
have argued that this is not a real issue, because we can develop pragmatic ways of dealing with
the corporate form (see Dan-Cohen, 1986; French, 1984). Others have argued that it is imperative
that this weak theoretical status is treated with pragmatism, because of the perceived economic
benefits the corporate form provides (Hessen, 1979; Osborne, 2007).
There are three main reasons to question such calls for pragmatism.
First, it is important to recognize that at the most basic level, the contemporary corporate form
is structurally built on two competing ontological assumptions. The simultaneous use of
these ontological assumptions means that the corporate form acquires two referents for theorizing
in the legal and economic domains: it can be understood as a reduced aggregation of individuals,
and it can be understood as a fully reified ‘entity’.2
The effect of this double referent is that the
corporate form can relate to a wide set of possible ontological positions. The corporate form can, for instance, be understood as a legal ‘subject’, attributable with citizenship rights and liability
for manslaughter; as an ideal-typical economic ‘agent’ contracting with employees and operating
in a broader market; as an object of property that can be bought and sold at will; or as a ‘nexus
of contracts’. As such, the corporate form presents a highly problematic social construct, which
escapes a clear and defined relation to ontological reasoning. With no possibility to exclude
one or the other position, it becomes very hard to establish the epistemological basis that establishes
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www.themoderncorporation.com the ‘criteria by which we can know what does and does not constitute warranted, or scientific, knowledge’ (Duberley and Johnson, Chapter 4 this volume) in relation to the corporate form.
Second, the weak theoretical foundation of the corporate form and the resulting multiplicity
of referents are quite relevant beyond academic theorizing. In both the legal and the economic
imaginaries (Veldman and Willmott, 2013) the corporate form constitutes a reified singular
construct with attributions of agency, ownership, and rights. At the same time, we find that the
dominant perception of the corporate form in contemporary law and economics and in
corporate governance theory strongly denies the ontological status of this construct. This is
highly problematic, because it denies and makes invisible many of the functions and outcomes
of the reified status of the corporate form in law and in economics. I will give two examples,
relating to liability and to the attribution of contractual agency.
The first example focuses on the attribution of liability to the corporation in the legal sphere.
Given the reified status of the corporate form in company law, not just the employees or ‘the
company’, but the corporate itself can be used for direct attributions of civil and criminal
agency and liability (Fisse and Braithwaite, 1993; Laufer, 2006) for any valid legal or economic
actions (Guinnane et al., 2007). At the same time, the dominant ontological understanding of
the corporate form in contemporary corporate governance requires that all attributions of
agency, responsibility, and liability are explicitly redirected toward individual members of the
corporation (Clarkson, 1996; Jensen and Meckling, 1976: 310; Wells, 2005). The combination
of mutually exclusive ontological assumptions thus produces the corporate form as a very
slippery construct, with the abilities of a schizophrenic (Allen, 1992) Cheshire Cat3(Naffine,
2003), which is ‘notoriously nimble’ (Dewey, 1926: 669) and confers a theoretical ‘elasticity’
that gives ‘considerable room in which to manoeuvre’ (Dewey 1926: 667–8) and to produce a
‘corporate vanishing trick’ (Ireland, 1999: 56) in relation to the attribution of responsibility and
liability (Bratton, 1989; Fisse and Braithwaite, 1993; Law Reform Commission (Ireland), 2002;
Lederman, 2000; Wells, 2005).
The second example concerns the attribution of contractual agency in the economic domain.
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Notwithstanding the emphatic rejection of an ontological status for the corporate form in
contemporary law and economics, the corporate form contracts with individuals and groups inside
and outside the corporation as a separate legal entity. By presenting a separate legal entity that
can be attributed with its own contractual agency as an economic ‘agent’ in the economic domain,
the corporate form negates the strong ontological program by which it was qualified
as a ‘purely conceptual artifact’ (Jensen and Meckling, 1994: 24), a simple technical necessity or
a ‘legal fiction’ (Friedman, 1970) and is reconstructed in the economic domain as a full-blown
‘entity’ with contracting agency. In this conceptual model it becomes acceptable to argue that ‘the
corporation’ can be afforded with contractual agency in the economic domain, but
the same multiplicity of ontological assumptions that applies to the corporate form in the
legal imaginary obscures the answer to the question what is the exact status of this
construct that is attributed with contractual agency in the economic domain.
Apart from problems with the identification of the exact point of attribution for contractual and
wider agency attributed to the corporate form in the legal and economic imaginary, the unclear
status of the corporate form affects the category of the ‘subject’ and the ‘agent’ more generally
(see also Veldman, forthcoming). Remember that in law and economics, a strong
ontological program restricted all attributions of agency to social constructs with a singular status,
such as ‘individuals’, ‘persons’, and ‘agents’ (see Friedman, 1970; Jensen and Meckling, 1994).
With a theory of organizations in which the individual agent is ‘the elementary unit of analysis’
(Jensen, 1983: 15), the contractual agency attributed to the corporate form by necessity is also
attributed to such an ‘individual’ or ‘agent’. Projecting the corporate form as an ‘individual’ in the
economic domain for purposes of attributing contractual agency, therefore, provides a concrete
ontology, in which the corporate form engages as a singular economic ‘individual’ or ‘agent’
in contractual relations, both within the corporation and in the wider marketplace (Maitland, 2003).
In so far as this construct is attributed with contractual ‘agency’ it doesn’t contract as an ordinary
‘individual’, but typically answers to ideal-type behavioural attributions coming from neoclassical
economics, e.g. the corporate form projects the idea of an ideal-type ‘individual’
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‘agent’ in the possession of full knowledge and an indefinite time horizon (Bratton, 1989). The
denial of a clear ontological status for the corporate form thus means that, a s construct,
it is projected into the slot of the singular economic ‘agent’ as an ‘agent’ with ideal-type ontological
properties, while retaining both its singular and aggregate referents and the attributions of agency,
ownership, and rights that have been granted on the basis of the use of this duplicitous status
(Veldman and Parker, 2012). This is a problematic situation, because it creates a highly elusive
construct in the legal and economic domains; because it restructures the notion of contract in
such a way that ideal-type ontology and ideal-type agency come to govern that relation in
the economic and in the legal imaginary (Aglietta and Rebérioux, 2005; Bratton, 1989;
Ghoshal, 2005; Schrader, 1993; Sen, 1977; Williamson and Winter, 1991); and because it
makes the ontological and behavioural assumptions pertaining to such an ideal-type
economic ‘agent’ the default for the ontological status of other constructs in the category of
the legal ‘subject’ and the economic ‘agent’ (Veldman, forthcoming).
Conclusions: the political economy of reification
In this chapter, I have showed how an engagement with philosophy can be instructive for
interrogating the ontological and epistemological status of the corporate form and showed
some outcomes in the domains of law and economics. To provide the means for further critical
inquiry, I will connect this status and these outcomes to the critique of reification provided by
Berger and Pullberg in this section.
Berger and Pullberg argue that by reifying a social construct we run the risk of developing
conceptual systems in which we end up with ‘a narrow empiricism oblivious of its own theoretical
foundations or to build highly abstract theoretical systems emptied of empirical content’ (Berger and
Pullberg, 1965: 211). We saw how a specific ‘ontological status’ (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 206)
has been devised for the corporate form as a social institution in law and in economics, which
allowed to endow this social construct with a large set of specific properties, including ownership,
agency, and rights. We also saw how the contemporary idea of the corporate form
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www.themoderncorporation.com in law and economics essentially negated the specificity of the corporate form and its status. As a result, we have an ontological status of the corporate form that refers to multiple
referents and a set of hegemonic assumptions in law and economics that negates the
specificity of the corporate form as a social construct.
As shown, the structurally inconsistent basis this creates for theorizing about the corporate
form is highly problematic, both in terms of the development of a coherent understanding of
the corporate form in the domains of law and economics, and in terms of coming to grips with its
outcomes. What’s more, the strong ontological program in law and economics as well as
the unclear ontological and epistemological status of the corporate form spill over into adjacent
academic domains, such as accounting, management, and politics, most particularly by informing
the way other social constructs, such as individuals, organizations, and states are imagined, both
by themselves, and in relation to each other (Bowman, 1996; Naffine, 2003; Lederman, 2000;
Schrader, 1993; Veldman, 2013; Wilks, 2013). The epistemological outcome of the reified status
of the corporate form is, therefore, that it ‘minimizes the range of reflection and choice,
automatizes conduct in the socially prescribed channels and fixates the taken-for-granted
perception of the world’ (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 208).
To address these problems, I argue that we need to become aware again that the corporate
form is a social construct that is produced by human beings (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 200,
204). From this perspective, it becomes clear that the strong ontological assumptions underlying
the treatment of the corporate form in contemporary law and economics and in corporate
governance theory obscure the fact that the corporate form presents a social construct, which
is based on multiple referents. To understand the status of this corporate form, we need to
return to an approach, in which we do not simply deny and obscure the de facto status of the
corporate form, but rather ‘bracket’ our assumptions with regard to the corporate form as a
social construct. By bracketing our assumptions, we find that the corporate form presents a de
facto singularized social construct in law and economics, and that historical attributions of agency,
ownership, and rights to this social construct have established it firmly as a construct with a de
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www.themoderncorporation.com facto ontological status. Acknowledging the reality of this de facto social construct is important, because the de facto existence of this construct, as well as its weak theoretical underpinnings,
has broad effects in relation to other (social) constructs, such as individuals, organizations, and
states. In this sense, this chapter on the corporate form presents an example of ‘ontological
theorizing’, which ‘has the power to emancipate organization studies from conventional
restrictions relative to the research questions; the scope of analysis; the methods of study; the
objects of study posited and the doubts raised’ (see Chapter 1, this volume).
Beyond ontological theorizing, bracketing our assumptions and finding the problematic status of
the corporate form provides the basis for a critical perspective. It has become clear in this
chapter that a long history of conceptual slippages in law and economics created the corporate
form became as a highly specific social construct. I showed how inserting the corporate form as
an ideal-type construct in contractual relations has turned the corporate form into a central
organizing concept for the construction of an economic ‘grid’ in which all kinds of constructs,
including individuals, organizations, and states, are re-conceptualized as nominally equivalent
‘entities’ with nominally equivalent ‘agency’ (Veldman, forthcoming; see also the ‘individualistic
approaches’ in Chapter 1, this volume). In this sense, the corporate form has been central to the
construction of an overarching economic ‘grid’ that legitimates a fetishized kind of knowledge of
ourselves and our social and economic relations with other social constructs (see
Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 199). More to the point, this ‘grid’ allows for a broad reinterpretation of
the relative ontological status of individuals, corporations, organizations, and states, which
has empowered corporations vis a vis individuals and states (Veldman, forthcoming). Also,
within this grid, the ontological status of the corporate remains uncontested and continues to
provide ample possibilities to enhance attributions of agency, ownership and rights, while at
the same time obscuring possibilities for the attribution of responsibility and liability in the
legal, economic, and political domains (Veldman and Parker, 2012).
This analysis informs a critical perspective, in which we focus on ‘the inherent connection
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www.themoderncorporation.com between power, politics, values and knowledge and thereby provokes a deeper consideration of the politics and values which underpin and legitimise the authority of scientific knowledge’
(Alvesson et al., 2009). Taking into account that knowledge always serves certain purposes and
groups (Alvesson and Willmott, 1992), we may reimagine the construction of the corporate form
as a set of discursive operations (see Chapters 1, 2 and 5, this volume), primarily in the domains
of law and economics, that create ‘artificial social constructs that are formulated in the context of
social relations of power’ (Al-Amoudi and O’Mahoney, Chapter 1 this volume). From this
perspective, it becomes clear that further reification of the corporate form will
make sure that it will remain unconnected from ‘the human activity by which it has been
produced’ (Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 199) and will, therefore, remain being taken for granted
(Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 206) as a construct that is ‘analogous to the facticities of nature’
(Berger and Pullberg, 1965: 207). From this perspective, it also becomes clear that it is this
reified status of the corporate form as a social construct that allows it to continue to function
as a highly evasive kind of social construct at the heart of the global legal, economic, and political
system, which shields individuals with managerial positions and (controlling) shareholders; allows for
the further concentration of economic (Perrow, 2002), legal (Buxbaum, 1984: 518–19; Robé, 1997:
59) and political power (Barley, 2007: 201; Wilks, 2013); and to a large extent supports (Aglietta and
Rebérioux, 2005) the current worldwide division of wealth (Piketty, 2014) on
behalf of small subsets of individuals (Ireland, 2010). Combining the reified status of the corporate form with its convenience for the perpetuation
of a particular kind of political economy, it can be argued that the highly problematic
ontological and epistemological status of the corporate form may very well not be the result of
simple theoretical and methodological aberration, and will probably not be solved by better
theory formation. Instead, what is needed is a more critical approach, in which the ongoing
reification of the corporate form is related to its effects for global political economy.
Notes
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www.themoderncorporation.com 1 See also www.youtube.com/watch?v=E2h8ujX6T0A. 2 Please note that in the dominant contemporary perspective on corporate governance, such a
dualistic notion of supra-individual ontology is explicitly denied for other types of supra-individual representation, such as the state (see Veldman, 2013). 3 The Cheshire Cat is a figure from Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. It can appear
and disappear at will. In the story, the cat disappears at some point, leaving nothing but its grin. Alice
then remarks she has seen a cat without a grin before, but never a grin without a cat.
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